Showing posts with label U-552. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U-552. Show all posts

Sunday, September 4, 2022

June 19, 1942: The Reichel Affair Threatens Blau

Friday 19 June 1942

Japanese POWs from the sunken Hiryu, picked up on 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Survivors of Japanese aircraft carrier Hiryu, sunk on 5 June, after being picked up by the U.S. Navy on 19 June 1942 (U.S. Navy).

Eastern Front: Adolf Hitler has been placing all of his hopes on the coming Summer offensive (Case Blau (Blue)) to capture the Soviet oil fields in the Caucasus and finally secure plentiful energy supplies. However, on 19 June 1942 the Germans receive terrible news that places the entire success of the offensive in question. Hitler himself, though, is kept in the dark about it until the 21st.

Contrary to well-known standing orders both in general and specifically put in place for Blau (War Directive ), a 23rd Panzer Division staff officer, Major Joachim Reichel, boarded a light transport aircraft (apparently a Fieseler FI-156 Storch) carrying a complete outline for the Blau offensive and specific plans for General der Panzertruppe Georg Stumme's Fortieth Panzer Corps. The pilot for some reason flies over the front lines, perhaps due to getting lost. A lucky shot by a Soviet rifleman pierces the fuel tank and forces the plane to crashland intact. 

Within hours, a German patrol finds the downed plane 4 km behind the Soviet lines but cannot find either Reichel or the pilot (they were shot after a brief firefight by a Soviet patrol and their bodies will be found by another German patrol two days from now). Most importantly, they do not find the briefcase containing the Blau plans.

The German high command now must assume that the plans for Blau have been compromised (they have, the plans are on Stalin's desk within a day). Field Marshal von Bock, commander of Army Group South, has the immediate reaction to start Blau immediately before the Red Army can react. OKH (General Franz Halder) agrees and tells him to put everything in readiness for a start on 26 June. However, the final decision is up to Hitler, and he is furious. He summons Bock to the Wolfschanzee in East Prussia for an explanation. Everything is now in doubt and nobody knows whether the grand offensive will even happen.

In his daily war diary, Halder's notes today do not mention the Reichel affair but do reflect upon more basic problems with the offensive:

The discussion with the top command on the efficient conduct of the Kupyansk-Izyum offensive follows a familiar and unpleasant pattern. Whereas von Bock, because of the terrain, wants to launch his tank drive directly from the west, top command considers that a mistake but feels no change ought to be ordered at this advanced stage of preparations, and approves von Bock's plan against its better judgment.

What Halder carefully skirts is identifying who this "top command" actually is - a sure sign it is Hitler himself, who according to Halder's notes (which may, of course, be inaccurate) briefly returned to headquarters in East Prussia on the 18th but now is back in Bavaria. This continues a pattern of Hitler doubting von Bock's judgment that began during the May Soviet counteroffensive at Kharkov and ultimately will lead to von Bock's final dismissal in mid-July.

Marilyn Monroe wedding day portrait 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The future Marilyn Monroe on her first wedding day, June 19, 1942.

Halder also mentions "very heavy economy attacks with local successes" from the trapped Soviet pocket on the Volkhov River in the north. This is Soviet General Andrei Vlasov's trapped 2nd Shock Army's last major attempt to break out. The attacks are aided in part by "adverse weather" that grounds the Luftwaffe.

In Crimea, General Manstein's 11th Army continues clearing out pockets of Soviet resistance, primarily a few remaining fortresses on "Battery Headland," the peninsula that dominates the bay's entrance. This is in preparation for the final assault on Sevastopol, but first, the 54th Army must take that peninsula. The final outcome in the sector north of Severnaya Bay is not in doubt following the fall of the key Soviet fortress Maxim Gorki. Luftwaffe air strikes are much less hazardous following the destruction of a key Soviet anti-aircraft platform in the bay. From first light, bombers based nearby conduct "rolling attacks" against all remaining valuable targets within the city. First, they use high explosive bombs, then, after noontime, incendiaries. 

Luftwaffe General von Richthofen, who is still in the theater prior to his transfer north to help with Blau, notes in his diary that Sevastopol is "a sea of flames," with smoke clouds stretching all the way to Feodosia, 150 km away. However, the chaotic supply situation soon will force a reduction in Luftwaffe sorties by around 40%.

Serbian partisans, 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Partisan soldiers of the 4th Proletarian Montenegrin Brigade and the Herzegovinian Detachment in the village of Lubina near Vrbnica on Zelengora, Serbia, June 19, 1942.

Battle of the Black Sea: Italian motor torpedo boat ("MTB") MAS-571 torpedoes and sinks Soviet 3000-ton transport evacuating wounded troops from Sevastopol. submarine Shch-214 off Crimea in the Black Sea. There are no survivors.

Separately, two other Italian MTBs based in Yalta chase a Soviet submarine, Shch-214, that has been spotted by reconnaissance aircraft near Cape Ay-Todor (five km west of Yalta). They catch up to it and sink the submarine near Cape Sarych. Everybody aboard, estimated at 39 crew and between 40-65 evacuees from Sevastopol, perishes. There are two survivors taken as POWs, one of whom perishes in captivity.

The two sinkings continue a series of similar Italian naval victories in the theater at little cost to themselves. These aggravating losses have forced Soviet Admiral Oktyabrskii to sharply curtail naval missions to Sevastopol, leading to German Admiral Schwarzes Meer (Black Sea Naval Command) war diary to include the entry today that "Enemy naval activity has greatly decreased."

The German Navy also gets a success when MTB S 102 torpedoes and sinks 2048-ton Soviet transport Belostok near Balaklava. There are 388 deaths. It is unclear if this happens on the 18th or 19th, so entries for this sinking are on both pages.

The Soviets have noticed the Italian successes, and after dark they send bombers of the Voyenno-vozdushnyye si/y (Soviet Air Force, or VVS) to attack German shipping at Yalta. The attack severely damages two Italian mini-submarines and cripples an MTB. 

German fishing schooner MFK-2263 hits a mine and sinks off Mariupol, Ukraine. Two men perish.

Battle of the Baltic: Soviet submarine Shch-317 torpedoes and sinks 2405-ton Danish freighter Orion off Visby, Sweden. There are one death and 21 survivors.

Danish 117-ton coaster Anna hits a mine and sinks in the Kattegat, off Paludian Flak. All four crewmen perish.

Canadian relocation notice, 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A relocation notice to Japanese Canadians issued in British Columbia newspapers on 19 June 1942 (Canadian government).

Battle of the Pacific: In one of the last direct consequences of the Battle of Midway, a U.S. PBY Catalina search plane spots a lifeboat east of the island and directs the destroyer U.S.S. Ballard to it. The lifeboat contains 35 sailors from the engineering room of fleet carrier Hiryū, sunk on 5 June 1942. After two weeks of exposure, one of the men passes away almost immediately. The POWs are taken to Midway, and then Pearl Harbor aboard the cargo ship USS Sirius.

U.S Navy submarine USS S-27 drifts toward shore during the night while recharging its batteries and at 00:43 grounds on rocks off St. Makarius Point, Kiska. The sub is gradually ground to pieces, and the crew abandons ship by 15:50 today.

The 11th Air Force sends B-24s to bomb Kiska but are forced to abort the mission due to heavy fog. One of the planes must make a crash-landing in the sea and two men are lost.

B-17s of the 5th Air Force attack Vunakanau Airfield, Rabaul, and nearby shipping.

U-552 returns to port, 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U-552, its Roter Teufel ("Red Devil") mascot plainly visible on the conning tower, returns to the typical warm welcome from German maidens at Saint Nazaire, France. Erich Topp is visible in the tower, with crew on deck. It has been a successful patrol, sinking five ships of 15,858 tons (Kramer, Federal Archive Image 101II-MW-6443-16A).

Battle of the Atlantic: Allied shipping losses off the American coast have been heavy for months now, and Allied leaders are starting to take notice. Today, U.S. Army Chief of Staff George Marshall writes to Admiral King:

The losses by submarines off our Atlantic seaboard and in the Caribbean now threaten our entire war effort....I am fearful that another month or two of this will so cripple our means of transport that we will be unable to bring sufficient men and planes to bear against the enemy in critical theaters to exercise a determining influence on the war.

Winston Churchill, currently visiting with President Roosevelt, is known to have this view as well, so it probably is not a coincidence that Marshall writes this grim note on this particular day.

U-701 (Kptlt. Horst Degen), on its third patrol out of Lorient, shells and sinks U.S. Navy trawler USS YP-389 (Lt R.J. Philips) 20 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. The trawler is at a disadvantage because its main gun is out of commission due to a faulty firing spring. The U-boat's shelling starts a fire forward and floods the engine room, and the ship sinks by the stern at 10:15. There are six deaths and 18 survivors (some sources say 4 deaths and 21 survivors).

U-159 (Kptlt. Helmut Friedrich Witte), on its second patrol out of Lorient, shells and sinks 2710-ton Yugoslavian freighter Ante Matkovi in rough weather just north of Riohacha, Colombia. The ship quickly catches fire and sinks at 18:10. Rescue is not forthcoming because one of the first shells took out the radio mast, so the men must make shore in Colombia in their lifeboats. There are six dead and 23 survivors.

U-107 (Kptlt. Harald Gelhaus), on its sixth patrol out of Lorient, shells and sinks 35-ton U.S. schooner Cheerio eight miles off Mona, Puerto Rico. The crew sets the ship on fire after the first few shells and abandons ships - the flames attract the attention of a PBY Catalina. All nine crewmen, clinging to driftwood, then are rescued by USS CG-459.

British 758-ton passenger steamer Dalriada hits a mine in the Edinburgh Channel and sinks while clearing a wreck.

German 125-ton minesweeper R-41 is torpedoed and sunk in the Seine Estuary, France. It is unclear who did this, perhaps British MTBs, which have been in the general vicinity in recent days. In the same action, German surface units shell and sink British gun boat HM SGB-7 in the Seine Estuary.

A U.S. mine in the Gulf of Mexico sinks 3009-ton Yugoslavian freighter Boslijka northwest of Key West, Florida. 

U-552 returns to port showing her Red Devil mascot, 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Good view of U-552's deck gun as it comes into Saint Nazaire following its successful patrol on 19 June 1942 (Kramer, Federal Archive Image 101II-MW-6443-07A).

Battle of the Mediterranean: Having effectively surrounded the critical Allied port of Tobruk on the 18th, General Erwin Rommel begins final preparations for an assault to take it quickly. Reconnaissance of deployment areas takes place in the morning, and in the afternoon he sends his armored formations (15th and 21st Panzer Divisions on the right, the Italian Trieste and Ariete Divisions on the left) to the southeastern corner of the perimeter where he plans to make his main effort. The 90th Light Division occupying that area moves further east toward the coast to assume a defensive posture in case the British Eighth Army attempts a relief effort from its positions further south.

The attack is scheduled to begin early on the 20th. The plan is for a feint by XXI corps in the west before the two panzer divisions - 15th on the left and 21st on the right, with a motorized infantry group left behind by 90th Light commanded by Generalleutnant Erwin Menny in between - makes the main effort. The Germans are astonished when they arrive to find German ammunition depots left behind during their retreat from the area in November 1941 still in place and useable.

On the British side, the inexperienced 2nd Battalion, 5th Mahratta Light Infantry holds the key area in the southeastern corner of the perimeter. Inland from them are the 2/7th Gurka Rifles, while on the other side along the coast are the 2nd Cameron Highlands. The two panzer divisions are to attack the Mahrattas, while the two Italian armored divisions will take on the Cameron Highlands.

The British are confident, given how long they were able to hold the port in 1941, but the command is disorganized after the frantic retreat from the Gazala Line and does not yet have its forces properly disposed for counterattacks. The upcoming battle is a clear example of the value of speed in continuing offensive operations rather than pauses that allow the defenders to dig in and recover from past defeats.

Italian 778-ton coastal freighter Carlotta SS hits a mine and sinks off Cape Platamone, south of Cattaro.

Partisans: The Germans, in Operation Hannover and Hannover II, have been trying to eliminate a major partisan force led by Soviet general Below in the Bryansk region for some time. On the 18th, a patrol found orders on a dead Soviet officer stating that a breakout east across the "Rollbahn" (highway) that the Germans loosely control back toward Soviet-held territory will take place at a specific point at midnight on 18/19 June. With nothing else to go on, the Germans have reinforced the area with three lines of defense comprised of infantry and artillery. General Heinrici, a defensive specialist, is in command.

The partisan breakout begins right on time as the clock ticks into 19 June. The breakout force is massive, and fighting lasts into daylight. The Russians get about 1500 troops across the first defensive line, 500 across the second, and perhaps a few across the third line. Having taken massive casualties, the remaining Soviets are forced back into the pocket, and at noon, Heinrici orders immediate pursuit. However, it then begins to rain, and in the confusion and dense forests, Belov and his remaining troops (about 3000) find an undefended portion of the Rollbahn and cross over unmolested.

Cajon Blvd in San Diego, 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Looking west on El Cajon Boulevard from Alabama Street, San Diego, June 19, 1942 (The Boulevard).

Spy Stuff: The leader of the Operation Pastorius German saboteur group in New York City, George John Dasch, takes a train down to Washington, D.C., and walks into FBI headquarters. He experiences some skepticism until he shows Assistant Director D.M. Ladd a sack full of $84,000 of the operation's funds. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover then begins arresting the German spies, which takes about two weeks. Hoover takes full credit for the arrests and neglects to mention to others that Dasch turned himself in.

Allied Relations: With Winston Churchill now in the United States,  the Second Washington Conference begins. It actually begins today in Hyde Park, New York, where Churchill travels to meet with President Roosevelt at his private residence. As he arrives, Churchill notices old warships from World War I tied up along the shoreline. In a flash of inspiration, he mentions to FDR that these sorts of obsolete vessels would be quite useful if sunk offshore to protect invasion landings from weather effects. FDR agrees and tells his naval authorities to make appropriate plans. This idea turns into the useful Mulberry Harbor at the D-Day (6 June 1944) landings.

The actual discussions revolve around the pressing question of where in Europe or Africa (and whether) the Western Allies should invade in 1942. The Americans want to open a Second Front in France, but Churchill and his generals demur. They prefer instead landings in the Mediterranean Theater - echoing German military experts such as Grand Admiral Raeder who have been advising Hitler to concentrate on the Mediterranean. This will remain the topic for discussion until the Second Washington Conference concludes (in Washington) on 25 June.

U.S. Military: Vice Admiral Robert L. Ghormley, USN, who has been recalled from a London post as "Special Naval Observer" for President Roosevelt for the assignment, assumes command of the South Pacific Area with headquarters at Auckland, New Zealand. He is the choice of both Admiral Nimitz, CINCPAC, and Admiral King. While Ghormley has a lot of experience, he has not commanded at sea since 1938 on the battleship Nevada and has no experience with aircraft carriers.

Picture Show Magazine, 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Picture Show Magazine for June 19, 1942, has Ray Milland and Paulette Goddard on the cover.

German Homefront: Alois Eliáš, the former Prime Minister of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia who was arrested for partisan activities on 27 September 1941, is executed at the Kobylisy Shooting Range after a lengthy time on death row. Eliáš is the only head of state executed by the Germans during World War II. He receives a full state funeral on 7 May 2006 and is reburied at the National Monument in Vitkov, Prague.

The 1st Ranger Battalion is activated in Carrickfergus, North Ireland. It is led by William Orlando Darby, and his troops are sometimes called "Darby's Rangers." The unit is composed of approximately 500 volunteers chosen from units training in Ireland, and the vast majority of Darby's Rangers come from the five midwestern states of Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin, North Dakota, and South Dakota. This unit is designed to be elite, so elite that they use live ammunition during training.

American Homefront: Boston Braves outfielder Paul Waner collects his 3,000th career hit on June 19, 1942.

New York Yankees outfielder Joe DiMaggio strikes out three times in one game for the only time in his career against Mel Harder of the Cleveland Indians, who pitches a complete game victory.

The U.S. government urges United States pharmacies to turn in quinine supplies over 10 oz. Quinine is considered the best current cure for malaria, and heavy fighting in the southwest Pacific is set to take place in areas where malaria is prevalent.

At 432 S. Bentley Ave, in the West Los Angeles neighborhood of Westwood, the 16-year-old Norma Jeane Mortensen marries the 21-year-old "Big Jim" James Dougherty. Norma Jeane becomes better known in the 1950s by her stage name Marilyn Monroe. The house is still in existence and currently is valued at $2 million.

Marilyn Monroe wedding photo, 19 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The future Marilyn Monroe gets married on 19 June 1942 to James Dougherty in her Los Angeles home. They remain married throughout the war.

2022

Sunday, August 14, 2022

June 15, 1942: Great Day For The Italian Navy

Monday 15 June 1942

HMS Bedouin sinks near Pantelleria, 15 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Royal Navy Tribal-class destroyer HMS Bedouin sinking during Operation Harpoon, 15 June 1942 (Ministero Della Difesa-Aeronautica, Regia Aeronautica). 

Battle of the Mediterranean: The Italian military gets a lot of grief from post-war armchair generals, but the navy proves it can fight and inflict heavy damage on 15 June 1942. This becomes known as the Battle of Pantelleria and merits a later visit (25 June) by Mussolino to congratulate the crews. Of course, the Battle of Pantelleria (In Italy, "Battaglia di Mezzo Giugno") is not played up in Allied post-war histories, rarely mentioned except occasionally as just another convoy battle.

The disaster that is Operation Julius, a conventional British resupply of Malta from both ends of the Mediterranean simultaneously, continues with more Allied losses. The situation has become so chaotic and untenable that the eastern half of the operation, Operation Harpoon, is temporarily called off, but then the order is reversed due to the "fog of war" - overly optimistic reports from Allied aircrews sent to attack the Italian fleet. 

It is a day of repeated Axis air attacks, many near misses and bombers shot down, and lost opportunities. After dark, Admiral Harwood finally cancels Operation Vigorous. Most of the ships are lost due to mines and the Italian surface fleet - two of the original six freighters make it to Malta despite the cancellation, delivering 15,241 tons of supplies. The failure of the tanker Kentucky to make port causes a fuel crisis on the island.

Italian Regia Aeronautica aircraft, which have been particularly effective during these attacks, bomb and severely damage Australian destroyer Nestor off Crete. It survives until the 16th, when it must be scuttled.

German E-boat S-56 (some sources say S-66) torpedoes Royal Navy light cruiser HMS Newcastle, severely damaging it. Newcastle does not become operational again until March 1943. British destroyer Hasty, damaged in the same way by E-boat S-55 before dawn, must be scuttled off Crete.

The Italian surface fleet also gets into the act. At dawn, Italian cruisers aided by the Regia Aeronautica hit the British off Pantelleria south of Sicily. Air attacks disable British tanker Kentucky (9457 tons) and freighters Chant, Bedouin, and Burdwan - all eventually sink due to naval gunfire or torpedoes.   

The British are able to strike back, though the weight of arms is heavily against them. Four Wellingtons out of Malta attack the Italian ships and score a torpedo hit on the cruiser Trento. Royal Navy submarines Maydon and Ultimatum spot battleship Vittorio Veneto and attempt attacks, but with no success due to the effective screen of cruisers. Submarine Umbra later finds Trento, dead in the water, and sinks it with two torpedoes.

Littorio bomb damage 15 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Damage to battleship Littorio from a 500-lb bomb hit by a USAAF B-24. The bomb apparently hit Turret No. 1, killing one man and injuring 12 but causing only superficial damage to the turret.

The Italian fleet, less Trento, continues south and is attacked by B-24 bombers, with battleship Littorio taking a hit from a 500-lb bomb and, much later, a torpedo hit that causes little damage. A later RAF attack and a dogfight ensues, the Luftwaffe shooting down two Beauforts and badly damaging five others (one crashes).

Ships Lost:

  • Trento (Italian cruiser) - 570 dead, 581 survivors.
  • HMS Airedale (destroyer) - 45 dead, 133 survivors
  • HMS Bedouin (destroyer) - 28 dead, 213 survivors
  • HMAS Nestor (destroyer) - four dead, scuttled 16 June.
  • Burdwan (6,069-ton British freighter)  
  • Chant (5601-ton U.S. freighter) - four dead, 81 survivors.
  • Kentucky (9308-ton British tanker) - damaged by Stukas, finished off by Italian surface fleet.
  • Burdwan (6069-ton British freighter) - damaged by Stukas, finished off by Italian surface ships.
  • HMS Newcastle (Town-class cruiser) - torpedoed and damage by S 56, towed to port and returned to service in March 1943.
  • Italian 215-ton minesweeper RD 7 - hits a mine and sinks off Saronikus, Greece.

On land, the situation is even worse for the British. Their struggling forces are pushed out of Knightsbridge, the Point 650 box lost, and General Erwin Rommel's 21st Panzer Division reaches Sidi Rezegh. The 15th Panzer Division cuts the road east of Tobruk, but the South African Division escapes before then. The struggling British Eighth Army does get some relief because the Luftwaffe is occupied with the convoys out at sea. This is one of the darkest days of the Mediterranean campaign for the British, with the certainty of more bad days to follow as they draw back on Tobruk.

The Fuhrer's staff apparently is pleased, and in any event he is still at the Berghof, so it is a good day at headquarters in East Prussia. General Franz Halder notes in the war diary that "Army Corps 'Africa' has broken through to the coast west of Toburk. Cheering success!

General Erwin Rommel, June 1942 North Africa worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Colonel-General Erwin Rommel with Major-General Georg von Bismarck, commander of the 21st Panzer Division, ca. 15 June 1942 (Otto, Albrecht Heinrich, Federal Archive Picture 101I-785-0286-31).

Eastern Front: General Manstein's attack toward Sevastopol continues making good progress, especially in the north. The Soviets are still fighting hard, though, and have plenty of ammunition remaining. Heavy operations continue on land, air, and sea, where an Italian mini-submarine has an unusual success when it torpedoes and sinks a surfaced Soviet submarine sailing off Cape Sarych. at Fuhrer Headquarters, General Franz Halder notes blandly in his war diary, "Advancing in southern and northern sector Sevastopol, and at Volchansk."

The German 132nd Division is leading the main attack in the north and now is within 900 meters of the Maxim Gorky fortress perimeter. The Soviet defenders of the 95th Rifle Division and 7th Naval Brigade are down to just 1000 men - basically, a single regiment. However, the Wehrmacht also has taken a staggering number of casualties just to get this far.

In the south, the Germans are stopped before Balaklava and the Soviets still hold the critical Sapun Ridge. Somewhat dismaying for the Germans is that they have captured only about 1000 Soviet soldiers but a staggering 1500 mortar projectiles, suggesting the defenders have plenty of ammunition while they themselves are always short.

The Luftwaffe, though, is making up for the German deficiencies on the ground. It has been averaging about 780 sorties a day since the start of the offensive with virtually no let-up. Attacks on Sevastopol cause first that can be seen in Feodosiya, 150 km away. From 13-17 June, the planes drop 3,086 tons of bombs.

Luftwaffe General Wolfram von Richtofen, a chief architect of the brewing German success at Sevastopol (and who rightfully deserves as much credit as Manstein), gets news that disgusts him. Reichsmarschall Goering phones him - usually quite an honor - and informs him that he is to be transferred north to Kursk to prepare for Case Blue - the summer attack toward Stalingrad. He will retain control of Fliegerkorps VIII, but his chief of staff, Oberstleutnant Torsten Christ, will remain behind and guide operations henceforth. 

Battle of the Baltic: Soviet submarine M-95 hits a mine east of Suursaari Island around this date, when she is declared missing. All hands are lost, the wreck is discovered in 2015. Also lost on this date is Soviet G-5-class motor torpedo boat No. 61.

Battle of Pantelleria 15 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The crew of Italian cruiser Raimondo Montecuccoli watches tanker Kentucky and freighter Burdwan burn, 15 June 1942 (Regia Marina).

Battle of the Pacific: Following the decisive victory at Midway, the Americans are reorganizing and making new plans. Admiral Nimitz reorganizes his carrier force, making Admiral Fitch temporarily commander of Task Force 11 in place of Admiral Fletcher, who takes a badly needed break for a couple of weeks. The first plan for Task Force 11 is to resupply Midway with aircraft. Later it is to head to the Southwest Pacific in July.

In the Aleutian Islands, bad weather aborts a bombing mission to Kiska Island by 3 B-17 and 2 B-24 bombers of the 11th Air Force.

US Navy submarine USS Seawolf torpedoes and sinks Japanese auxiliary gunboat Nampo Maru off Corregidor.

European Air Operations: Major General Carl Spaatz, new Commanding General of the USAAF's 8th Air Force, arrives to take up his command in the UK. The VIII Bomber Command establishes the 1st Bombardment Wing (Provisional) at Brampton Grange, England.

U-751 commander Gerhard Bigalk, 15 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U-751 commander Gerhard Bigalk at St. Nazaire, 15 June 1942. He has just this day returned from U-751's sixth war patrol, during which it has sunk two American ships totaling 4555 tons of shipping (Federal Archive Bild 101II-MW-6433-39).

Battle of the Atlantic: U-172 (Kptlt. Carl Emmermann), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 2438-ton Norwegian freighter Bennestvet in the Caribbean. There are 12 dead and 13 survivors, who are rescued by USS PC-458.

U-552 (Kptlt. Erich Topp), on its ninth patrol out of St. Nazaire, has a big day against a British convoy, with five ships sunk. This is one of the top totals of the war. He sinks 15,858 tons of shipping in one day in one convoy not too far from his base and then quickly heads back to port to stock up again on torpedoes.

First, it torpedoes and sinks 2759-ton British freighter City of Oxford west of Cape Finisterre, Spain. It is part of convoy HG 84. There are one death and 42 survivors, who are picked up by freighter Stockport.

U-552 gets another one in the same convoy in the same general vicinity west of A Coruña, Spain. This victim is 1943-ton British freighter Etrib. There are four deaths and 41 survivors, who are rescued by HMS Marigold.

U-552's third victim in the convoy is 1346-ton British freighter Pelayo. There are 17 deaths and 30 survivors, rescued by freighter Copeland.

U-552's fourth ship is the 2436-ton British freighter Thurso. There are 13 deaths and 28 survivors, rescued by HMS Marigold.

U-552 also gets a fifth victim, Royal Navy 7374-ton tanker Slemdal, also 400 nautical miles northwest of A Coruña. All 37 crew survive. It is unconfirmed whether this was by U-552.

Battle of Pantelleria 15 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Italian destroyers watch Allied ships burn, 15 June 1942. Photo taken from destroyer Oriani, with Ascari and Oriani ahead.

U-502 (Kptlt. Jürgen von Rosenstiel), on its fourth patrol out of Lorient, also has a big day. It sinks three ships to end its patrol with 54,045 tons of shipping sunk.

First, it torpedoes and sinks 5010-ton Panamanian freighter Cold Harbor 100 nautical miles (190 km) northwest of Trinidad. There are seven deaths and 44 survivors, who are rescued by U.S. ships Exmouth and Kahlua and U.S.S. Opal.

U-502 also torpedoes and sinks 8001-ton U.S. freighter Scottsburg 90 nautical miles (170 km) west of Grenada. There are five dead and 46 survivors, rescued by U.S. ship Kahuku.

U-502 also torpedoes and sinks 5702-ton U.S. Freighter West Hardaway 30 nautical miles (56 km) west of Grenada. All 50 crew are rescued by Venezuelan ship Maracaibo.

U-68 (KrvKpt. Karl-Friedrich Merten), on its fourth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 9242-ton Vichy French tanker Frimaire northeast of Santa Maria, Columbia. All 60 crewmen perish.

U-126 (Kptlt. Ernst Bauer), on its fourth patrol out of Lorient, shells and sinks 125-ton British sailing freighter Dutch Princess east of St. Lucia and northwest of Barbados. All nine crewmen survive.

In the South Atlantic off the coast of Brazil, Italian submarine Archimede torpedoes and sinks 5586-ton Panamanian freighter Cardinia.

U-701 (Kptlt. Horst Degen), on its third patrol out of Lorient, recently has laid mines at the entrance to Chesapeake Bay, and today they pay off dramatically with multiple hits.

Royal Naval trawler HMT-Kingston Ceylonite hits a mine and sinks in the Chesapeake Bay off Virginia Beach, Virginia while with Convoy KN 109. There are 18 deaths and 14 survivors. U.S. 11,615-ton tanker Robert C. Tuttle also hits a mine in the same vicinity and sinks, with one dead and 46 survivors. Tuttle, however, is later raised, repaired, and returned to service.

U.S. 9310-ton tanker F.W. Abrams sinks after hitting a U.S. mine off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, on 11 June. The tanker had been hiding in the minefield for safety when it blundered into one in heavy rain, then drifted into a second one. Attempts to salvage have failed, and it finally sinks today about 20 km off Ocracoke. Every one of the 36-man crew survives, with one injured.

Royal Navy motor torpedo boat (MTB) 201 is badly damaged by German surface warships off Dover and sinks while under tow.

F.W. Abrams sinking, 15 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
U.S. tanker F.W. Abrams sinking off Cape Hatteras, 15 June 1942 (The Mariner's Museum).

Spy Stuff: The leader of the German spy ring that is staying at a Manhattan hotel, George Dasch, has called the New York office of the FBI and told them about his operation in an effort to surrender. Displeased at the result, however, he sits and brews, waiting until the weekend to take a train down to Washington, D.C., to surrender.

U.S. Military: 63d Bombardment Squadron, 43d BG, 5th Air Force moves from Sydney to Charleville with its B-17s.

American Homefront: Exiled Greek King George II addresses the U.S. Congress in Washington, D.C.

Coogee Beach, Sydney, 15 June 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Coogee Beach, Sydney, Australia, 15 June 1942, taken 13,000 feet by an Adastra Airways plane as part of a survey (Royal Australian Historical Society).


2022

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

April 30, 1942: U-Boats Attack!

Thursday 30 April 1942

Soviet freighter Ashkhabad sinking, 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Convoy escorts scuttle Soviet freighter SS Ashkhabad off Cape Lookout, North Carolina, after it was torpedoed by U-402 on 30 April 1942.
Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese put Operation Mo, the projected capture of Port Moresby, into gear on 30 April 1942. They send carriers, Shokaku, Zuikaku, and Shoho, now replenished and rested after the Indian Ocean raid, to start the operation from the fleet base at Truk (Chuuk Lagoon).

RAAF P-39 fighters flying over the Stanley Mountain Range strafe Japanese planes and installations on the north coast at Lae and Salamaua. They lose one P-39F (41-7128).

Two Consolidated PBY-4 Catalinas of Patrol Squadron 101 (VP-101), based in Perth, Western Australia, fly a hazardous, lengthy, and circuitous route to the Philippines. They rescue 30 nurses from Corregidor Island, the lone Allied position holding out in the region, without incident. Many nurses, however, still remain on the fortified island, along with thousands of trapped soldiers. All are suffering deprivations and constant shelling from the Japanese artillery on the mainland and bombing attacks.

US Navy submarine USS Greenling (SS-213) stalks Japanese ammunition ship Seia Maru off Eniwetok. It fires torpedoes four separate times today and tomorrow. However, the torpedoes are faulty (a common problem during this period due to faulty fuses). The chase continues into 1 May 1942 but, despite even attempting a surface night attack, cannot sink it.
Borger, Texas, Daily Herald, 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Borger (Texas) Daily Herald headlines the Japanese capture of Lashio, Burma, in its 30 April 1942 edition.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Having taken Lashio, the Japanese send troops north toward Bhamo on the Irrawaddy River. They encounter opposition at a bridge across the Shweli River at Manwing by troops of the Northern Shan States Battalion, Burma Frontier Force. This defensive force left Lashio when the Chinese departed on 29 April. It manages to hold up the Japanese there for several days.

The Chinese Sixty-Sixth Army, still a powerful force although levered out of Lashio, withdraws along the Burma Road into China via Kutkai and Wanting. The Chinese 200th Division, which is isolated to the south and finds the way back to China blocked at Lashio, turns in the other direction and heads for Maymyo (Pyin Oo Lwin) in the direction of Mandalay. While this sends them in the general direction of the remaining British forces, the ultimate goal is to return to China as well. Doing so, however, will entail a lengthy detour around the advancing Japanese forces.

The British, meanwhile, continue to prepare for the inevitable loss of Mandalay as they retreat. Engineers destroy the bridge at Ava, the former capital of Burma, near the confluence of the Irrawaddy and Myitnge rivers just south of Mandalay. Their ultimate fall-back position, of course, is across the border in India.
German defensive line in Russia, April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A German defensive position on the Eastern Front, April 1942.
Eastern Front: The Soviet Lyuban offensive is generally defined as ending on 30 April 1942. In reality, this effort ceased posing a threat to the Wehrmacht weeks ago due to the German response Unternehmen Raubtier ("Operation Wild Beast") that encircled the large Soviet force. It is estimated that the Volkhov Front loses 308,367 (95,064 killed or missing) out of an initial force of 327,700 during the operation - which is comparable to the later German losses at Stalingrad. General Andrey Vlasov, commander of the 2nd Shock Army, remains trapped in the dwindling pocket to the west of the Volkhov River. He cannot leave it without orders from Stalin - who habitually does not give such orders to failed commanders and troops. In any event, the spring thaw ("Rasputitsa") has stopped almost all operations for the time being.

European Air Operations: After many days of relentless attacks, both the RAF and Luftwaffe take the day off from major attacks. RAF Bomber Command does send 24 Boston bombers on escorted raids against Le Havre and Flushing docks, the Abbeville railway yards, and Morlaix airfield. These are all common targets and the raids are accomplished without loss. This begins a period of several days without major RAF attacks, though subsidiary operations such as minelaying continue.
HMS Edinburgh after being torpedoed on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"A photograph clearly showing the severe damage to the stern of HMS EDINBURGH caused by a German torpedo whilst traveling with convoy QP11. The damage was so great that HMS EDINBURGH had to be sunk by a torpedo of the British destroyer HMS FORESIGHT." © IWM MH 23866.
Battle of the Atlantic: Today is a great day for U-boats in the Barents Sea, off the US coast, and near the United Kingdom.

The brewing confrontation in the Barents Sea heats up on 30 April 1942. Two Allied convoys - PQ 15 and QP 11 - are converging in opposite directions north of Norway and the Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe are ideally situated to wreak havoc. The Germans begin attacking, with U-88 and U-436 attacking freighters but missing, but score few successes. The main forces have not been committed pending further developments by advanced units already in place.

U-456 (Kptlt. Max-Martin Teichert), on its fourth war patrol out of Kirkenes, begins the battle when it torpedoes and damages the Royal Navy cruiser HMS Edinburgh (13 deaths), which is escorting QP 11. Edinburgh was a late addition to the convoy escort and is hit soon after it arrives. The U-boat scores two hits, one in the forward boiler room and the other at the stern. Under half power, with the rudder and two of four propellers destroyed, Edinburgh heads back toward Murmansk scored by destroyers Foresight and Forester. Other ships leave Murmansk to aid the stricken cruiser, including British minesweepers Gossamer, Harrier, Hussar, and Niger, the Soviet destroyers Gremyashchy and Sokrushitelny, the Soviet guard ship Rubin, and a tug. 

While the cruiser does not sink (yet), its damage causes the Allies problems. The attack exposes more Allied ships to attack and reduces the convoy escort by three ships. The Kriegsmarine attempts to take advantage of this favorable change in circumstances by dispatching the three destroyers of Zerstörergruppe "Arktis" (Z7 "Hermann Schoemann" (KptzS Schultze-Hinrichs), Z24, and Z25), under the command of Kapitän zur See Alfred Schulze-Hinrichs, to attack QP 11 and finish off the Edinburgh. It will take them until the afternoon of 1 May 1942 to reach the convoy.
German heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
German heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer is spotted by RAF reconnaissance while warming up for a potential dash to the Arctic convoys from its base at Trondheim, Norway, 30 April 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command NH 110804).
U-402 (Kptlt. Siegfried Freiherr von Forstner), on its third patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and badly damages Soviet freighter Ashkhabad south of Cape Lookout, North Carolina. The 47 crewmen abandon the freighter and are rescued by HMT Lady Elsa. The Ashkhabad remains afloat and naval authorities decide to salvage her. However, before tug USS Relief can make it to the location, two escorts (USS Semmes and HMT St. Zeno) scuttle Ashkhabad as a hazard to navigation.

U-552 (Kptlt. Erich Topp), on its eighth patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks Canadian troop transport SS Nerissa In the Atlantic northwest of Ireland about 200 miles (320 km) from Liverpool. Topp is on the surface when he spots the transport approaching from the northwest and then stalks the ship for almost two hours. One of three torpedoes hits the Nerissa astern, and Topp soon closes to pump another torpedo into it. There are 84 survivors and 207 (124 passengers and 83 crew) deaths. The survivors are picked up at first light by HMS Veteran. The Nerissa is remembered as the only troopship to have Canadian casualties en route to England during World War II.
SS Nerissa, sunk on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
SS Nerissa, sunk by Erich Topp's U-552 on 30 April 1942.
U-162 (FrgKpt. Jürgen Wattenberg), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 8941-ton British freighter Athelempress about 180 nautical miles (330 km) east of Barbados. There are three deaths and 47 survivors, who are picked up by Norwegian freighter Atlantic.

U-752 (Kptlt. Karl-Ernst Schroeter), on its fifth patrol out of La Pallice, torpedoes and sinks 4956-ton Norwegian freighter Bidevind about 74 miles southeast of Ambrose Lightship in the Atlantic east of Delaware and south of Long Island. All 36 crewmen survive (three injuries). The wreck, at 190 feet (58 m), becomes a popular deep-dive site for advanced local sport divers.

U-507 (KrvKpt. Harro Schacht), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 2881-ton US tanker Federal about 5 nautical miles (9.3 km) north of Gibara, Cuba. There are five deaths and 28 survivors, some of whom are picked up by a Cuban fishing trawler while others make it to shore in a lifeboat.

U-576 (Kptlt. Hans-Dieter Heinicke), on its fourth patrol out of St. Nazaire, torpedoes and sinks Norwegian freighter Taborfjell about 95 nautical miles (176 km) east of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The ship is carrying unrefined sugar from Matanzas, Cuba. There are 17 deaths and three survivors, who are picked up by HMS P552.
SS Taborfjell, sunk on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
SS Taborfjell, sunk by U-576 on 30 April 1942.
Battle of the Mediterranean: The Axis air offensive against Malta continues on 30 April 1942. The Germans and Italians have averaged 200 bomber sorties over the island since Luftwaffe General Albert Kesselring began the offensive in March 1942. Today's attacks begin at 11:20 and continue throughout the day as usual. The Luftwaffe's rescue operations have become increasingly brave and a Dornier Do 24 flying boat is seen offshore rescuing a downed German pilot. While rescue operations under prewar agreements are considered humanitarian operations immune from attack, in reality, they have been deemed game since the Battle of Britain for alleged reconnaissance operations.
Hitler and Mussolini at Schloss Klessheim on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Hitler and Mussolini at Schloss Klessheim for their two-day meeting at the end of April 1942 (National Digital Archives Poland).
Axis Relations: Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini continue their summit meeting at Schloss Klessheim in Salzburg, Germany. Hitler unleashes a monologue lasting an hour and forty minutes on the Duce covering a wide variety of military, economic, social, and philosophical topics but noticeably silent about the future Franco-Italian frontier and similar topics of particular interest to Italy. Hitler is quoted as saying "Soon the laughter of the Jews will fall silent forever," "The Aryan is the Prometheus of mankind," and "Violence is the mother of order and the source of all true greatness - I have restored to violence its true meaning." Anticipating the final collapse of the Soviet Union by the fall, he elaborates on his post-war plans, many of which revolve around social engineering.

The Salzburg meeting marks the first time at these conferences that Hitler talks about a definitive end to the war due to a decisive summer campaign in the Soviet Union. He convinces Mussolini to agree to send more Italian troops to the Eastern Front, but his plans for the Mediterranean that is of much more urgent concern to Mussolini are left vague. Hitler reveals the Wehrmacht, in conjunction with Italian forces, plans to invade Malta in Operation Hercules (Unternehmen Herkules), with a tenuous launch date of mid-July 1942. The plans have been approved but are on hold pending developments in North Africa.

However, Operation Hercules is a divisive issue within the German hierarchy. While local Wehrmacht commanders including Generals Albert Kesselring and Erwin Rommel, both in attendance, strongly support Operation Hercules, They believe it would secure the Mediterranean for Axis shipping (which has taken heavy losses from the Royal Navy). Luftwaffe boss Hermann Goering is concerned. He believes that invading Malta could turn into a near-disaster like the ultimately successful but costly paratrooper (Fallschirmjäger) invasion of Crete (Operation Mercury) in May 1941. Hitler himself is very hesitant about the operation for the same reasons and wants to focus on the Eastern Front. The operation is never launched.
USS Peto being launched on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
USS Peto (SS-265) side launching at Manitowoc Shipbuilding Co, Manitowoc, WI, 30 April 1942. It will be commissioned on 21 November 1942 after becoming the first submarine to use the mid-western waterways to reach New Orleans, LA. It has a distinguished career in the Pacific Theater of Operations (US Navy photo).
US/Vichy France Relations: US Ambassador to France Admiral William Leahy bids farewell to his Embassy staff in Paris before beginning the long journey back to the United States. No new ambassador is slated to replace him, effectively ending diplomatic relations. The U.S. Embassy will remain open, run by Charge d’Affaires Pinckney Tuck, until the landing of US troops in French North Africa in November 1942 ("Operation Torch").

US Military: Admiral Harold R. Stark assumes command of U.S. Naval Forces Europe. This is actually a demotion, as Stark has been Chief of Naval Operations since August 1939. Stark is under a cloud due to the losses at Pearl Harbor and eventually must face a court of inquiry over this with negative findings for him. However, Stark makes the best of a bad situation and oversees the buildup of US naval forces from his headquarters in London, culminating in the successful D-Day landings.

The US Navy commissions 35,000-ton battleship USS Indiana at Newport News, Virginia. She will serve primarily in the Pacific Theater of Operations and be decommissioned in 1947.

Two Vought SB2U Vindicator aircraft collide during training exercises off Sandy Point, Block Island. The two-man crew of one plane survives, the other two men (Ensign David Kauffman and Lt. (Jg.)  Howard Lapsley) perish.
USS Indiana, commissioned on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
USS Indiana on 27 January 1944 (Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-222923).
US Government: The House naval committee rejects a bill to raise the statutory workweek from 40 hours to 48 hours, limit war profits, and freeze the status quo of open and closed workplaces for the duration of the war. This bill is likely in response to a recent US Supreme Court decision allowing reasonable profits from the manufacture of goods for the United States military during World War I. President Roosevelt is against the bill, which elicits strong passions on both sides.
Hollywood Victory Caravan at the White House on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Eleanor Roosevelt (center, dressed in white) poses with members and organizers of the Hollywood Victory Caravan on the White House lawn, 30 April 1942 (Gene Lester, Library of Congress Digital ID# bhp0124).
Holocaust: In Dzyatlava, Western Belarus, German soldiers wake up resident of the Zdzięcioł Ghetto with gunshots. The Judenrat issues a statement from the German authorities that all Jewish residents are to assemble at an old cemetery on the fringes of the ghetto. Those who refuse are brought by force to that location by Germans and their local Belarusian and Lithuanian collaborators. After a typical Holocaust selection process where some victims are selected for execution based on age and gender, these roughly 1000 people, perhaps more, are marched to nearby Kurpiasz (Kurpyash) Forest and shot and buried know unmarked graves (about 100 are given reprieves based on documents they carried). Another similar massacre takes place on 10 August 1942 and subsequent days for a total of about 3000 victims or more. This is known as the Dzyatlava massacre and a plaque commemorates it.

Japanese Homefront: The Imperial Rule Assistance Association, which supports the government and its goals of his Shintaisei ("New Order") movement, dominates local elections. it wins 381 out of 466 seats.
Evacuations of internees in California on 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Evacuation of the Santa Maria Japanese to Tulare Assembly Center from the Christ United Methodist Church, 219 N. Mary Dr., Santa Maria, California on April 30, 1942 (University of California).
American Homefront: Lieut. Gen. John DeWitt, head of the Western Defense Command, issues new evacuation orders for 5100 additional people of Japanese descent from Alameda, Contra Costa, and Los Angeles Counties. Evacuations will continue until 20 May 1942.

Film studio 20th Century Fox releases "My Gal Sal," a musical directed by Irving Cummings starring Rita Hayworth and Victor Mature. It profiles 1890s composer and songwriter Paul Dresser. The biopic is a typical mixture of reality and Hollywood artifice, with some of the songs having no connection to Dresser. The film features comedian Phil Silvers and Terry Moore (later girlfriend, maybe wife, of Howard Hughes and still alive as of this writing in 2021) in early roles.
Napa Register 30 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The big news in The Napa Register on 30 April 1942 is the defeat of the 48-hour workweek (Napa Valley Register).

April 1942

April 1, 1942: Convoys Come to the USA 
April 2, 1942: Doolittle Raiders Leave Port
April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan
April 4, 1942: Luftwaffe Attacks Kronstadt
April 5, 1942: Japanese Easter Sunday Raid on Ceylon
April 6, 1942: Japanese Devastation In Bay of Bengal
April 7, 1942: Valletta, Malta, Destroyed
April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse
April 9, 1942: US Defeat in Bataan
April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March
April 11, 1942: The Sea War Heats Up
April 12, 1942: Essen Raids Conclude Dismally
April 13, 1942: Convoy QP-10 Destruction
April 14, 1942: Demyansk Breakout Attempt
April 15, 1942: Sobibor Extermination Camp Opens
April 16, 1942: Oil Field Ablaze in Burma
April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid
April 18, 1942: The Doolittle Raid bombs Japan
April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape
April 20, 1942: The Operation Calendar Disaster
April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

May 1942


2021